Hi,

You get about 12 hours with video at full charge and 24 while just listening, to music.

Thanks for listening,
Alex,


On 13-Nov-08, at 12:30 PM, Scott Howell wrote:

Wow, thank you Esther, I will definitely check this out and load it on my Nano. Come to think of it, I believe the Nano gets much less time when playing videos, maybe it's only a couple of hours, but it'll be worth it. :) Well ok, could just play it on the machine of course. I am curious and will have to ask my wife how the video looks on the little screen.

On Nov 13, 2008, at 1:09 PM, Esther wrote:

Hi Scott and Others,

Just to followup on my post about iTunes U podcasts and the descriptiive video service episode for President Roosevelt: downloads from iTunes U don't show up under podcasts. A folder gets created under playlists. In the case of the American Experience podcasts, this will be named after the authoring institution, WGBH. The individual (video) episodes show up under Movies in your Library.

Scott, since some of your earlier iTunes questions have been about organizing jazz tracks, you might be interested in the program that was announced as: "Celebrating the Legacy of Louis Armstrong on iTunes U" that showed up on the Apple Hot News RSS feed last week. I'm going to paste in the description and link:

<begin quote>
At the centennial of his birth, the Artistry of “Pops”: Louis Armstrong at 100 celebrates the legacy of “the man whose name is synonymous with jazz music.” The program, courtesy of Columbia University’s Center for Jazz Studies offers historic clips of “Pops” and a discussion about Armstrong’s contribution to jazz and American culture by musician and jazz critic Stanley Crouch and trumpet legend Wynton Marsalis.

http://deimos3.apple.com/WebObjects/Core.woa/Browse/columbia.edu.1673135858?sr=hotnews

<end quote>

I don't know the size of the this video podcast, but please note that the videos at iTunes U can be large -- part 1 of the FDR dvs episode is 414 MB and runs to 1.7 hours. Part 2 is even longer at 2.3 hours, and there are (multi-part) episodes for five other presidents. The Louis Armstrong video is 1.5 hours long.

Cheers,

Esther

Scott Howell
[EMAIL PROTECTED]






Reply via email to